Probably none left?

Yesterday, Friday 16th March, Business Studies turned negative on TeachVac’s scale that compares vacancies for main scale teachers with trainee numbers. I wrote on this blog a few weeks ago predicating this would happen soon, and it has duly come to pass. Next to turn negative will be Design and Technology, probably sometime in April, if the present rate of progress is maintained and allowing for the Easter break.

Now, it is interesting to compare the date these subjects effectively ran out of trainees and turned negative in each of the past three years as well as this year.

Date where TeachVac recorded enough vacancies to provide a teaching post for all trainees in the relevant ITT Census

Year Business Studies Design & Technology
2015 15th April 20th May
2016 22nd April 30th September
2017 31st March 2nd June
2018 16th March Before end of April?

Source: TeachVac

Both subjects are likely to have seen enough teaching posts created by schools in England to absorb all trainees at a ratio of two recorded vacancies for every one trainee at an earlier point this year than in any of the previous three years. Of course, Business Studies may be propped up by some schools being prepared to recruit economists to teach Business Studies and TeachVac doesn’t publish data on the number of posts in economics, although the data is collected. However, the warning signs apparent when the DfE ITT census was announced of a failure to fill all training places available has come about.

The position in a portmanteau subject such as Design and Technology is more complex. The ITT Census does not breakdown the categories of specialism with the subject, so there may already have been more vacancies for say, teachers of textiles, than there are trainees, but still relatively more trainees in another aspect of the subject. TeachVac collects the data from advertisements about specific knowledge and skills required, but does not make it public. For anyone with a genuine reason to want the data, TeachVac is willing to discuss what might be made available. But, clearly even with timetables being adjusted downward in the subject, the failure to fill more than a third of training places was always going to have a severe impact upon schools looking to recruit design and technology teachers.

So, what are the effects of this situation? Well, it is likely to mean that some schools will find recruiting teachers in these subjects challenging. As the recruitment round heads towards its conclusion in November and December for January 2019 appointments, any school with an unexpected vacancy might well start by considering it won’t be just a matter of placing an advert and waiting for applications to arrive. The number of returners, for whatever reason, is always unpredictable, as is the wastage rate of teachers leaving the profession. Existing teachers may well see whether other schools are offering incentives for current teachers to move to them? Whether the new subscription model being operated by the TES makes this more likely is an interesting question. Free services such as TeachVac and the one currently being worked upon by the DfE might face the charge that by reducing recruitment costs they increase opportunities for churn among the teaching force. Such a situation is always possible under a market-based model of teacher recruitment, but is only replacing state planning of where teachers are to be sent with acceptance of the laws of supply and demand.

 

 

7 thoughts on “Probably none left?

  1. The laws of supply and demand mean schools will likely drop Business Studies and elements of D&T. Neither are EBacc subjects and the latter is expensive. My local grammar already doesn’t offer home economics and textiles only appears fleetingly within art. One flagship free school, Michaela Community School, said in its free school application said:

    ‘DT will not be taught because we are a school that specializes in academic subjects and we are ensuring that the majority of our pupils will achieve the English Baccalaureate. For this to happen, academic subjects need to be prioritized in terms of time allocation. DT has been sacrificed in order to provide this emphasis. We also feel that the costs of equipping and maintaining a design and technology department are not matched by the benefits of doing so.’

    This admission didn’t prevent the school opening (to much fanfare) and it’s a favourite school of schools minister Nick Gibb.

    RIP D&T

    • Janet,

      The alternative is to use either untrained instructors or PE teachers unable to find a job in their subject. Instructors were common both these subjects when I taught in the 1970s. I recall one of the two people teaching business studies was an instructor and the D&T department had a jewelry maker teaching aspects of D&T to the first 3 years.

      Without a fully mandated National Curriculum there will be differences in what schools offer. How much freedom should the State allow schools?

      Call D&T life skills; works skills and volunteering skills and have units in the first on cooking, DIY; on the second fashion, engineering catering as careers and on the third fixing heritage assets such as cars, trains, canal boats and restoring textiles, houses and so on and this might revitalise the way the skills are approached: just a thought.

      John

Leave a reply to Janet Downs Cancel reply